The Confederate flag is just as much a badge of shame as the Nazi Swastika.
Those that promote this symbol of evil and oppression should be recognised for what they are.
As to if this should be displayed - the answer is obvious - any place the Swastika is OK is OK for the confederate flag. So maybe at a fancy dress party
		
		
	 
Have you been reading the thread, or did you just drop in?
The Confederate flag is a badge of family honor for blacks whose ancestors fought for the South as free men.  The Confederate flag is a statement of individual freedom by people who don't care what color you are.  The Confederate flag is a number of things, not just one.  
In a case I described I think fairly well, it was a way to tease his 'redneck' fraternity brothers -- and open a chance for education.  Do you really think my former acquaintance wouldn't laugh in your face at that "Those that promote this symbol of evil and oppression should be recognised for what they are" claim?
It's like the Swastika:  are you going to tell all the people with honorable uses of that symbol, dating from long before the National Socialists picked it up, are evil unless they only use it "maybe at a fancy dress party"?
	
		
	
	
		
		
			I meant because the KKK hate the hispanic community and that flag is their symbol. They're gone to picket some immigration events.
and asian dream exactly my point. Racism exists today in the back of people's minds and so well embedded and think its not there. Some kid came to school with a swastika freshmen year in 2003 in high school and said it was german pride.. good god he got suspended so fast! I remember his name too and everything. GERMAN PRIDE MY ASS. The whole 4 years he made fun of alot of minorities and had very few friends. Same way as the confederate flag lovers saying its southern pride? Sounds right to me.
As for the blacks fighting in the civil war.. on the confederate side.... many didn't know what they were doing and were told what to do...  some people will do whatever to defend that racist piece of fabric! 
Kinda like the boi in my high school that said the holocaust was a hoax?
People who say the civil war was not mainly over slavery... its the same deal! Oh the poor south.. oh poor them.. the big bad north was coming to take their free labor which meant they had to get up and work.. oh no.. work.. and not being able to discriminate on the basis of race.. lets feel sorry for them because thats why they had to stand up for themselves...!
People who deny shit are ignorant
		
		
	 
Cher, you and Asian are making this very one-dimensional.  That's usually the tactic of those who want to brainwash people so they won't think any longer.  But a number of us here have provided you with batches of truth you're just skating on by.  It's the same 'reasoning' used by the KKK, btw, who want everyone to have the same sort of mental set, only about blacks -- they want everyone to believe that all blacks are just trash, just like you want us to believe that all use of the Confederate flag is just trash.  They want everyone to think that the Confederate flag is "their symbol" -- and you're right there with them.  They don't want anyone to think that it might mean something else, that there are people who disagree with them to whom it means other things, so they can promote the "us vs. them" mentality.
You keep ignoring the information people have given you here, dude.  I'd say you describe yourself pretty, well, right here:  
	
		
			
				Cher said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			People who deny shit are ignorant
		
		
	 
As for the kid, the swastika, and "German Pride", he was full of it because there's no historical foundation for that claim at all.  The swastika was 
never a German symbol, ever, anywhere in history.  It's been a mystical symbol, a religious symbol of sorts, and a decorative item, but never has it been associated with the German people.  If he'd claimed it was mystical, and been able to tell what it meant as a mystical symbol, he might have had a case, but German?!
BTW, if he'd wanted a symbol for German Pride, he'd have been on good ground with the Iron Cross:  although it was somewhat taken over by the Nazis, it had a long history before them, from clear back with the Teutonic Knights, then the Kingdom of Prussia, and the German Empire.  It was an award for valor, given to those who already exemplified the knightly virtues of faithfulness, bravery, honor, protection of the weak, etc., (enough so that there were holders of it as an award from the German Empire who, when the Nazis co-opted it, gave up wearing theirs, in protest).  The swastika, though, never meant anything to Germans except, perhaps, a good-luck symbol in folklore.
Personally, I would've made the kid research the swastika and submit a minimum three-page essay about what it really meant.  Ignorance is one thing, but public displays of ignorance deserve correction.